Welcome to our Outdoor CAT 7 Page. American
Tech Supply stocks outdoor CAT 7 cable and our bulk CAT 7 outdoor cable comes shielded and is available on only black. Our outdoor CAT 7 cable comes in all custom sizes from 1-300 feet and is cusstom built inthe USA .We custom build all out CAT 7 patch cables in all lengths - some of our sample lengths are available below. Again the standard lengths of our outdoor CAT 7 Patch Cords and outdoor shielded CAT 7 patch cables range from 1 foor to300 feet. All our CAT 7 patch cords and cables are made in New York and California with same day shipping to 5 day lead times depending on quantity. All our CAT 7 Patch Cords are custom made by hand, tested and certified with a Fluke DXT 1800 tester before shipping. Please visit our shopping cart for ordering or request a custom quote or call (866) 342-3721. Thank you for your interest in our customer Outdoor CAT 7 Patch Cables!

American
Tech Supply carries CAT 7 Patch Cords and CAT 7 patch cords from 1-300 feet. All our CAT 7 patch cords and cables are made in New York and California with same day shipping or 1- 5 day lead times depending on quantity. All out CAT 7 Patch Cords are custom made by handd, tested and certified before shipping.

We also stock CAT 7 Patch Cords and CAT 7 Patch Cords
along with our molded- booted standard CAT 6 Patch Cords and CAT6 Patch Cords. Category 7/Class F (ISO/IEC 11801) cable specifications require transmission frequencies of up to 600 MHz over 100 meters of fully shielded copper cabling. CAT7 cable consists of four individually shielded pairs inside an overall braided shield, also known as Shielded Twisted Pair Cable (SSTP), or S/FTP (Shielded Foil Twisted Pair). CAT7 features even more stringent specifications for crosstalk and system noise than CAT6, and is designed specifically for Gigabit Ethernet applications (Gigabit over copper).Cat 7 network cabling is used as a cabling infrastructure for 1000BASE-T (Gigabit Ethernet, or GbE) and 10GBASE-T (10-Gigabit Ethernet, or 10 GbE) networks. The Cat 7 standard provides performance of up to 600 MHz (1000 MHz for the Cat-7a, or Augmented Category 7 standard) and can be used up to a maximum length of 100 meters. Category 7 cable is able to achieve higher performance than preceding Ethernet standards such as Cat 5, Cat 5e and Cat 6 by requiring each of its twisted wire pairs to be fully shielded. This is known as Screen Shielded Twisted Pair (SSTP) or Screened Foiled Twisted Pair (SFTP) wiring, and it almost completely eliminates alien crosstalk while significantly improving noise resistance.

The CAT 7 standard was published in 2002 by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and is also known as Class F cabling.The EIA and TIA along with BICSI are moving forward to advancing the next levels of standard to Category 8 which was published this past November in Cabling Magazine. While more expensive than Cat 5e and Cat 6 cabling, Cat-7 cabling does have a 15-year lifecycle (compared to estimated 10-year lifecycles for Cat 5e and Cat 6), which helps improve its overall return on investment (ROI).

Boots match cable color. Custom modular cable assemblies are available.Category 7 cable (Cat 7), (ISO/IEC 11801:2002 category 7/class F), is a cable standard for Ethernet and other interconnect technologies that can be made to be backwards compatible with traditional Cat 5 and Cat 6 Ethernet cable. Cat 7 features even more strict specifications for crosstalk and system noise than Cat 6. To achieve this, shielding has been added for individual wire pairs and the cable as a whole.

Note: Field termination of TERA-to-modular plug patch cords is not recommended and is not compliant with Siemon warranty.

The Cat 7 cable standard has been created to allow 10 Gigabit Ethernet over 100 m of copper cabling (also, 10-Gbit/s Ethernet now is typically run on Cat 6a). The cable contains four twisted copper wire pairs, just like the earlier standards. Cat 7 can be terminated either with 8P8C compatible GG45 electrical connectors which incorporate the 8P8C standard or with TERA connectors. When combined with GG45 or TERA connectors, Cat 7 cable is rated for transmission frequencies of up to 600 MHz.

Same as Cat6 patch cords, except that are made to a higher standard (see comparison chart below). The Cat7 standard is still in the works (as of this writing) and is not yet part of the 568A standard. One major difference with cat7 Patch Cords and patch cords (as compared with cat 5, cat5e, and cat6 Patch Cords) is that all 4 pairs are individually shielded, and an overall shield enwraps all four pairs. Cat7 patch cords will use an entirely new connector (other than the familiar RJ-45 used for cat 5, cat 5e and cat 6 patch cords).